Vitaly Milonov said the Government could not simply suspend the law, which has now been signed in by President Putin

A Russian legislator who co-sponsored the controversial anti-gay law recently introduced, has said the government cannot suspend the law for the 2014 Winter Olympics, as has been suggested this week.

Vitaly Milonov said on the BBC’s Russian-language service, translated by JoeMyGod, that the government should not selectively enforce the law, which bans homosexual “propaganda”, of which he was a co-sponsor.

“I haven’t heard any comments from the government of the Russian Federation, but I know that it is acting in accordance with Russian law. And if a law has been approved by the federal legislature and signed by the president, then the government has no right to suspend it. It doesn’t have the authority,” said Milonov in an interview with Interfax.

In a different interview, the legislator went further to say that he doesn’t know of any LGBT athletes, and that the law had nothing to do with “the ordinary life of adults”.

“I can say that the best figure-skating in the world is the Soviet school of figure skating. All of our people have been completely traditional — I am personally acquainted with many Olympic champions. In fact I practically grew up in those families,” he said.